CHERRY CORP
PRER14A, 1994-06-13
COMPUTER PERIPHERAL EQUIPMENT, NEC
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<PAGE>
                            SCHEDULE 14A INFORMATION

                  Proxy Statement Pursuant to Section 14(a) of
            the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Amendment No.    )

   
    Filed by the Registrant /X/
    Filed by a Party other than the Registrant / /

    Check the appropriate box:
    /X/  Preliminary Proxy Statement (Revised)
    / /  Definitive Proxy Statement
    / /  Definitive Additional Materials
    / /  Soliciting  Material  Pursuant  to  Section  240.14a-11(c)  or  Section
         240.14a-12

    

                                    THE CHERRY CORPORATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

                                    THE CHERRY CORPORATION
- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                   (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement)

Payment of Filing Fee (Check the appropriate box):

   
/X/  Fee paid with Preliminary Filing
/ /  $125 per Exchange Act Rules 0-11(c)(1)(ii), 14a-6(i)(1), or 14a-6(j)(2)
/ /  $500 per  each party  to  the controversy  pursuant  to Exchange  Act  Rule
     14a-6(i)(3)
/ /  Fee   computed  on   table  below   per  Exchange   Act  Rules  14a-6(i)(4)
     and 0-11
     1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     2) Aggregate number of securities to which transaction applies:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     3) Per unit  price  or  other  underlying  value  of  transaction  computed
        pursuant to Exchange Act Rule 0-11:*
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     4) Proposed maximum aggregate value of transaction:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
*    Set forth the amount on which the filing fee is calculated and state how it
     was determined.

/ /  Check box if any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act Rule
     0-11(a)(2)  and identify the  filing for which the  offsetting fee was paid
     previously. Identify the previous filing by registration statement  number,
     or the Form or Schedule and the date of its filing.

     1) Amount Previously Paid:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     2) Form, Schedule or Registration Statement No.:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     3) Filing Party:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
     4) Date Filed:
        ------------------------------------------------------------------------

    
<PAGE>
REVISED
PRELIMINARY COPY

                             THE CHERRY CORPORATION
                               3600 SUNSET AVENUE
                            WAUKEGAN, ILLINOIS 60087
                                  708-662-9200

                              -------------------

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                            TO BE HELD JUNE 30, 1994

                               -----------------

To the Stockholders of
  The Cherry Corporation:

      Notice  is hereby  given that  the annual  meeting of  stockholders of THE
  CHERRY CORPORATION,  a Delaware  corporation, will  be held  at its  corporate
  offices,  3600 Sunset Avenue, Waukegan, Illinois,  on Thursday, June 30, 1994,
  at 4:00 p.m. local time, for the following purposes:

      1. To elect seven  directors of  the Corporation  to hold  office for  the
         ensuing year.

      2. To  consider and  act upon  a proposal to  amend Article  Fourth of the
         Company's Certificate of Incorporation,  as amended, to (i)  reclassify
         the  existing Common Stock of the Company as Class B Common Stock, (ii)
         authorize a new class of non-voting common stock, designated as Class A
         Common Stock, (iii) increase the number of authorized shares of  Common
         Stock from 10,000,000 to 30,000,000, consisting of 20,000,000 shares of
         Class A Common Stock and 10,000,000 shares of Class B Common Stock, and
         (iv) establish the rights, powers and limitations of the Class A Common
         Stock and the Class B Common Stock.

      3. To  consider  and transact  such other  business  as may  properly come
         before the meeting or any adjournments thereof.

      The Board of Directors has fixed the close of business on May 16, 1994, as
  the record  date  for  the determination  of  the  holders of  shares  of  the
  Corporation's  outstanding Common Stock  entitled to notice of  and to vote at
  the annual meeting of stockholders. Each  stockholder is entitled to one  vote
  per share on all matters to be voted on at the meeting.
                                   By Order of the Board of Directors

                                                    DAN A. KING
                                                     SECRETARY

   
  June 15, 1994
    

  PLEASE  DATE, SIGN AND MAIL THE ENCLOSED  PROXY IN THE ENVELOPE PROVIDED WHICH
  REQUIRES NO POSTAGE  FOR MAILING IN  THE UNITED STATES.  A PROMPT RESPONSE  IS
  HELPFUL, AND YOUR COOPERATION WILL BE APPRECIATED.
<PAGE>
PRELIMINARY COPY

                             THE CHERRY CORPORATION
                               3600 SUNSET AVENUE
                            WAUKEGAN, ILLINOIS 60087
                                  708-662-9200

                              -------------------

                                PROXY STATEMENT
                         ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                                 JUNE 30, 1994

                               -----------------

                               VOTING INFORMATION

   
    This  Proxy  Statement  is  being  mailed  to  stockholders  of  The  Cherry
Corporation (the  "Company") on  or about  June 15,  1994, and  is furnished  in
connection  with the Board of Directors'  solicitation of proxies for the annual
meeting of  stockholders  to be  held  on June  30,  1994, for  the  purpose  of
considering  and  acting upon  the  matters specified  in  the Notice  of Annual
Meeting of Stockholders accompanying this Proxy Statement. If the form of  proxy
which  accompanies  this Proxy  Statement is  executed and  returned, it  may be
revoked by the  person giving  it at  any time prior  to the  voting thereof  by
written  notice  to the  Secretary, by  delivery of  a later  dated proxy  or by
requesting to vote in person at the meeting. Without extra compensation, certain
directors,  officers  and   employees  of  the   Company  may  make   additional
solicitations  in person or by telephone  or telegraph. Expenses incurred in the
solicitation of proxies,  including postage, printing  and handling, and  actual
expenses  incurred by brokerage houses,  custodians, nominees and fiduciaries in
forwarding documents to beneficial owners, will be paid by the Company.
    

   
    Each stockholder is  entitled to one  vote for each  share of the  Company's
Common  Stock held as of the record date.  For purposes of the meeting, a quorum
means a majority of the outstanding shares.  As of the close of business on  May
16,  1994,  the record  date for  stockholders  entitled to  vote at  the annual
meeting, there were outstanding  4,664,098 shares of  Common Stock, entitled  to
one vote each. In determining whether a quorum exists at the meeting, all shares
represented  in person  or by  proxy will  be counted.  A stockholder  may, with
respect to the election  of directors, (i)  vote for the  election of all  named
director  nominees,  (ii)  withhold authority  to  vote for  all  named director
nominees or (iii)  vote for the  election of all  named director nominees  other
than  any nominee  with respect to  whom the stockholder  withholds authority to
vote by so indicating in the appropriate space in the proxy. With respect to the
proposal to  amend the  Company's Certificate  of Incorporation,  as amended,  a
stockholder  may (i) vote  for the proposal,  (ii) vote against  the proposal or
(iii) abstain from voting. Proxies properly executed and received by the Company
prior to the meeting and  not revoked will be voted  as directed therein on  all
matters  presented at the meeting.  In the absence of  a specific direction from
the stockholder, proxies will  be voted for the  election of all named  director
nominees,  each to hold office until the  next annual meeting of stockholders or
until his successor is duly elected and qualified and for the proposal to  amend
the Certificate of Incorporation.
    

    Proxies  relating to "street name" shares that  are voted by brokers on some
but not all of  the matters will  be treated as shares  present for purposes  of
determining  the presence  of a quorum  on all  matters, but will  be treated as
shares entitled  to  vote only  as  indicated below  ("broker  non-votes").  The
affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the shares present in person or
by  proxy at  the meeting and  entitled to vote  is required in  the election of
directors. Withholding authority to vote for  a director nominee will in  effect
count  as a  vote against  the director nominee.  Broker non-votes  will have no
effect in the election of  directors. The affirmative vote  of the holders of  a
majority  of the outstanding shares is required  for approval of the proposal to
amend the Company's  Certificate of Incorporation,  as amended. Abstentions  and
broker  non-votes in connection  with this proposal will  count as votes against
this proposal.
<PAGE>
    The Board of Directors knows of no other matter which may come up for action
at the meeting. However, if any other matter properly comes before the  meeting,
the  persons named in the proxy form enclosed will vote in accordance with their
judgment upon such matter.

   
    Stockholders wishing to include proposals  in the Company's proxy  statement
and form of proxy for the 1995 annual meeting must submit such proposals so that
they  are received by the Secretary of the Company at its Waukegan address by no
later than February 15, 1995.
    

    The Annual Report  to stockholders for  the fiscal year  ended February  28,
1994,  accompanies this Proxy Statement. Additional  copies of the Annual Report
may be obtained by writing to the Secretary of the Company.

                          STOCK OWNERSHIP INFORMATION

    As of May 16, 1994,  set forth below are (1)  the only persons known to  the
Company  to beneficially own more than 5% of the outstanding Common Stock of the
Company, (2) the beneficial holdings of executive officers shown in the  Summary
Compensation Table, and (3) the benefical holdings of all executive officers and
directors  as a group. Except as set forth below, the address for such person or
group is the Company's Waukegan office.

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                NUMBER OF
                                                NAME                                           SHARES OWNED        PERCENT
           ------------------------------------------------------------------------------  --------------------  -----------
<S>        <C>                                                                             <C>                   <C>
(1)        Walter L. Cherry and
           Virginia B. (Mrs. Walter L.) Cherry...........................................    1,626,915(a)(b)(e)       34.9%
           Peter B. Cherry...............................................................    1,398,702(b)(c)(e)       30.0%
           FMR Corporation
           82 Devonshire Street, Boston, MA 02109........................................      629,600                13.5%
(2)        Executive Officers in Summary Compensation Table..............................    1,444,362(d)             30.9%
(3)        All Officers and Directors as a Group (10 persons)............................    2,834,750(e)             60.5%
<FN>
- ---------
(a)   Mr. and Mrs. Cherry disclaim ownership of the shares held in each  other's
      name.

(b)   The table includes 255,727 shares of Common Stock held by the Catherine C.
      Moore  Trust for the benefit  of Catherine C. Moore,  of which Virginia B.
      Cherry and Peter B. Cherry (her son)  are trustees with the power to  vote
      the  Common Stock  and to  make dispositions.  Mrs. Cherry  and Mr. Cherry
      disclaim beneficial ownership.

(c)   The table includes 47,911 shares of Common Stock held by Mr. Cherry's wife
      as trustee for  their children, as  to which shares  Mr. Cherry  disclaims
      beneficial  ownership. The  table includes  22,500 shares  of Common Stock
      held by Act &  Co., the nominee  of Harris Trust and  Savings Bank, in  an
      irrevocable  trust for the benefit of the  children of Mr. and Mrs. Walter
      L. Cherry. The children have the power to vote and dispose of such  stock.
      The  table also includes 712,000 shares of Common stock held by trusts for
      the benefit of Walter L. Cherry and Virginia B. Cherry, of which Peter  B.
      Cherry  (their son) is trustee with the power to vote the Common Stock and
      to make dispositions.

(d)   The total  number of  beneficially owned  shares of  Common Stock  of  the
      Company  for  each  of  the  Executive  Officers  listed  in  the  Summary
      Compensation Table is as  follows: Peter B.  Cherry, 1,398,702; Alfred  S.
      Budnick,  15,374; Grant  T. Hollett, Jr.,  12,250; Dan A.  King, 8,414 and
      Klaus D. Lauterbach, 9,622.

(e)   The total number of shares of Common Stock of the Company for each of  the
      executive  officers  and  directors  includes  shares  held  under options
      exercisable within 60 days as follows:  Walter L. Cherry, 2,000; Peter  B.
      Cherry, 2,000; Alfred S. Budnick, 8,666; Grant T. Hollett, Jr., 4,334; Dan
      A. King, 3,001 and Klaus D. Lauterbach, 1,317.
</TABLE>
    

    Each  director and executive officer of the Company is required to report to
the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission,  by  specified  dates,  his  or  her
transactions  in the Common Stock of the Company. During fiscal year 1994, Klaus
D. Lauterbach  and  Charles  W. Denny  each  filed  one such  report  after  the
specified date.

                                       2
<PAGE>
                             ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

    At  the annual  meeting of  stockholders, seven  directors, constituting the
entire Board of Directors of the Company, are to be elected to hold office until
the next  annual meeting  of stockholders  or until  their successors  are  duly
elected  and  qualified. Unless  otherwise indicated  on the  proxy form,  it is
intended that the proxies  will be voted  for the nominees  listed below. It  is
expected  that these nominees will  serve, but, if for  any unforeseen cause any
such nominee should decline or be unable to serve, the proxies will be voted  to
fill  any vacancy so  arising in accordance with  the discretionary authority of
the persons named in the proxies unless otherwise indicated on the proxy form.

NOMINEES
    The following information concerning the nominees has been furnished by  the
nominees:

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                             COMMON
                                                                                 FIRST      STOCK OF     PERCENT OF
                                              PRINCIPAL OCCUPATION               YEAR     THE COMPANY   COMMON STOCK
                                             DURING LAST FIVE YEARS             ELECTED      OWNED          OWNED
          NAME AND AGE                      AND OTHER DIRECTORSHIPS            DIRECTOR   MAY 16, 1994  MAY 16, 1994
- ---------------------------------  ------------------------------------------  ---------  ------------  -------------
<S>                                <C>                                         <C>        <C>           <C>
Peter B. Cherry (47).............  Chairman   of   the   Board   (1992)   and    1977       1,398,702*        30.0%
                                    President,  1982   and  Chief   Executive
                                    Officer,  1986 and (prior  to 1986) Chief
                                    Operating Officer
Walter L. Cherry (77)............  Development Engineer  as  of  January  10,    1953       1,626,915*        34.9%
                                    1992,  formerly Chairman of the Board and
                                    (prior to 1986) Chief Executive Officer.
Alfred S. Budnick (56)...........  Vice  President   of   the   Company   and    1977          13,374           .3%
                                    President    of    Cherry   Semiconductor
                                    Corporation.
Thomas L. Martin (72)............  President Emeritus  of Illinois  Institute    1979           2,200           .1%
                                    of  Technology.  Mr.  Martin  was  also a
                                    director of Kemper Family of Funds  until
                                    December 1993.
Robert B. McDermott (66).........  Private  Investor,  formerly  partner, law    1982          17,000           .4%
                                    firm of  McDermott,  Will  &  Emery;  Mr.
                                    McDermott  is also a  director of Maynard
                                    Oil Company.
Peter A. Guglielmi (51)..........  President,  Tellabs  International,   Inc.    1993          --            --
                                    (voice  and data communications equipment
                                    manufacturer) and Tellabs  Communications
                                    Canada  Ltd., (1993), and Chief Financial
                                    Officer, Tellabs, Inc. (1988)
Charles W. Denny (58)............  President  and  Chief  Executive  Officer,    1993         --            --
                                    Schneider   North   America   (1992)  and
                                    President and  Chief  Operating  Officer,
                                    Square D Company (electrical distribution
                                    and industrial control products
                                    manufacturer)  (1992) and (prior to 1992)
                                    Executive Vice  President. Mr.  Denny  is
                                    also  a director  of Woodhead Industries,
                                    Inc.
<FN>
- ---------
*     Includes shares of Common Stock owned by  wives in the cases of Walter  L.
      Cherry  (658,736 shares) and Peter B.  Cherry (47,911 shares) each of whom
      disclaims that he is the beneficial owner of any shares held by his  wife;
      reference  is made  to the footnotes  under the table  in "Stock Ownership
      Information."
</TABLE>
    

                                       3
<PAGE>
    Because of their  equity interests in  the Company, Mr.  and Mrs. Walter  L.
Cherry  and Peter B. Cherry may be deemed "control persons" as that term is used
under regulations of the Securities and Exchange Commission. Peter B. Cherry  is
the  son  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Walter  L.  Cherry.  There  are  no  other  family
relationships.

                                  COMPENSATION

    The following table sets forth the cash and noncash compensation for each of
the last three fiscal years awarded to or earned by the Chief Executive  Officer
of  the Company and the four other most highly compensated executive officers of
the Company.

                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                     LONG-TERM
                                                                                   COMPENSATION
                                                                                  ---------------
                                                                                     NUMBER OF
                                                                                      SHARES
                                                                                    UNDERLYING
                                                    ANNUAL COMPENSATION (1)            STOCK            ALL OTHER
                                               ---------------------------------    OPTIONS (4)    COMPENSATION (2)(3)
         NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION             YEAR     SALARY ($)  BONUS ($)         (#)                ($)
- ---------------------------------------------  ---------  ----------  ----------  ---------------  -------------------
<S>                                            <C>        <C>         <C>         <C>              <C>
Peter B. Cherry                                     1994  $  301,111  $   50,000        --              $  10,743
 Chairman of the Board and President                1993     228,711      --            --                  6,659
                                                    1992     229,899      --             2,000             --
Alfred S. Budnick                                   1994     206,250     126,920        --                  7,356
 Vice President of the Company and President        1993     192,506      89,408         1,000              6,665
 of a Subsidiary                                    1992     176,666      42,481         3,500             --
Klaus D. Lauterbach                                 1994     286,527      23,728        --                 --
 Vice President of the Company and General          1993     282,911      33,843           950             --
 Manager of a Subsidiary                            1992     244,886      21,461         3,000             --
Grant T. Hollett, Jr.                               1994     216,273      66,200        --                  9,314
 Vice President of the Company and President        1993     201,639      61,176         1,500              5,754
 of a Division                                      1992     176,461      30,600         5,000             --
Dan A. King                                         1994     128,579      31,100        --                  5,362
 Treasurer, Secretary and Corporate                 1993     106,817      21,600         1,000              3,056
 Controller                                         1992      97,651      13,968         3,500             --
<FN>
- ---------
(1)   Table excludes perquisites as amounts received do not exceed the lesser of
      $50,000 or 10% of any of the named officers salary and bonus.

(2)   In accordance with the revised rules on executive compensation disclosure,
      amounts of  All Other  Compensation are  excluded for  the Company's  1992
      fiscal year.

(3)   Represents Company contributions under 401(k) and profit sharing plans.

(4)   The Company did not grant any stock options in fiscal 1994.
</TABLE>
    

                                       4
<PAGE>
                AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                       AND FISCAL YEAR END OPTION VALUES

   
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                          NUMBER OF
                                                                           SHARES
                                                                         UNDERLYING         VALUE OF
                                                                         UNEXERCISED   UNEXERCISED IN-THE-
                                                              VALUE      OPTIONS AT     MONEY OPTIONS AT
                                                            REALIZED     FY-END (#)        FY-END ($)
                                         SHARES ACQUIRED       ($)      EXERCISABLE/      EXERCISABLE/
                 NAME                    ON EXERCISE (#)       (1)      UNEXERCISABLE   UNEXERCISABLE (1)
- --------------------------------------  -----------------  -----------  -------------  -------------------
<S>                                     <C>                <C>          <C>            <C>
Peter Cherry..........................              0       $       0     1,334/666      $21,678/$10,822
Alfred Budnick........................              0               0    7,167/1,833     113,717/26,158
Klaus Lauterbach......................          1,316          12,106      0/1,634          0/23,023
Grant Hollett.........................              0               0    2,167/2,667      33,089/37,839
Dan King..............................              0               0    1,500/1,834      23,003/26,176
<FN>
- ---------
(1)   Value  is calculated based  on the difference  between the option exercise
      price and the  closing market price  of the  Common Stock on  the date  of
      exercise  or end  of fiscal  1994 multiplied  by the  applicable number of
      shares.
</TABLE>
    

BOARD OF DIRECTORS

    The Board of Directors held four meetings in fiscal 1994. All directors were
present for at least 75% of the  meetings for which they were in office,  except
that  Mr. Guglielmi  attended one of  two meetings  for which he  was in office.
Non-employee directors are paid  an annual fee of  $4,000, plus $2,000 for  each
meeting they attend. Employee directors receive no compensation as such.

    The  Board of Directors has an Audit Committee and a Compensation Committee,
each composed of non-employee directors. The Committee Chairman receives  $1,500
and  the  other  members receive  $500  for  each meeting  held.  The  Audit and
Compensation Committees  held two  meetings in  fiscal 1994.  The Board  has  no
Nominating Commmittee.

   
EMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS AND CHANGE OF CONTROL AGREEMENT
    
    Pursuant  to an  agreement dated May  26, 1992  between Cherry Semiconductor
Corporation (CSC) and Mr. Budnick, CSC  has agreed to compensate Mr. Budnick  if
he  is terminated within 5  years subsequent to a change  in control of CSC. The
agreement provides for  a payment of  between one to  three times Mr.  Budnick's
annual  salary depending upon the amount of  time which has lapsed subsequent to
the change in control. In general, a change of control occurs if CSC is sold.

         REPORT OF THE COMPENSATION COMMITTEE ON EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

    The Compensation Committee of the Board of Directors is responsible for  the
Company's  executive compensation policies. Subject to review by the full Board,
it annually determines the compensation to be paid to the executive officers  of
the Company. The Committee is composed of outside directors.

OVERVIEW AND PHILOSOPHY

    The  executive compensation program is intended to provide overall levels of
compensation for the executive officers which are competitive for the industries
and the geographic areas within which they operate, the individual's experience,
and contribution to the long-run success  of the Company. The Russell 3000  (see
Performance  Graph) includes companies that operate  in the industries which the
Committee considers. The Compensation Committee believes that services of  great
value to the Company and its stockholders can be rendered in periods of business
adversity  as well  as in good  times. The  Committee believes that  its task of
determining fair  and competitive  compensation is  ultimately judgmental,  even
though formulas are used to some extent as described below.

    The  program is composed of base  salary, annual incentive compensation, and
other benefits generally available  to all employees. As  of February 28,  1994,
incentive stock options on 78,000 shares of the Company's stock were outstanding
but no options were granted during the fiscal year then ended.

                                       5
<PAGE>
BASE SALARY

    The  base salary  for each executive  is established to  be competitive with
companies in the industries and geographic areas in which the Company  competes.
Surveys  from outside firms and  consultants are used to  help determine what is
competitive. In making  annual adjustments  to base salary,  the Committee  also
considers  the individual's  attainment of personal  management objectives which
are ordinarily established at the  beginning of the year,  as well as any  other
information   which  may  be  available  as  to  the  value  of  the  particular
individual's  past  and  prospective  future  services  to  the  Company.   This
information includes comments and performance evaluations by the Company's Chief
Executive  Officer as to individuals other than himself. The Committee considers
all such data;  it does not  prescribe the relative  weight to be  given to  any
particular component of such data.

ANNUAL INCENTIVE COMPENSATION

    Annual incentive compensation is largely determined by formulas in different
plans  for each  subsidiary or  division of  the Company.  In all  cases a major
component is  dependent  upon  the subsidiary's  or  division's  earnings.  That
portion  of the annual incentive  not determined by formula  is set by measuring
achievement of financial goals -- such as cash flow, working capital management,
and capital expenditures -- and other goals which ordinarily are established  at
the beginning of the year.

LONG-TERM INCENTIVES

    Incentive stock options were granted to executives in earlier years (but not
in  fiscal 1994)  because they directly  relate the executive's  earnings to the
stock price appreciation realized by the Company's stockholders over the  option
period.  Stock options  also provide  executives the  opportunity to  acquire an
ownership interest  in  the  Company.  The number  of  shares  covered  by  each
executive's  option was  determined by  factors similar  to those  considered in
establishing base salary.

   
    The capability to grant new incentive  stock options under the Stock  Option
Plan  expired  in  June  1992.  As  a  result,  the  Committee  may  grant  only
non-qualified stock options. No  such options were granted  in fiscal 1994.  The
Committee  has evaluated alternative long-term incentive  plans, but to date has
not adopted any such plans.
    

    In general, the  Committee has  believed that  stock options  should form  a
secondary  part of an executive's total compensation package, partly because the
price of the Company's stock may be  subject, during the term of the option,  to
competitive  and other factors over which a particular executive may have little
or no control.

OTHER

    Other benefits are generally those available  to all other employees in  the
Company,  or  a subsidiary,  as  appropriate. Together  with  perquisites, these
benefits did not  exceed 10%  of any executive's  combined salary  and bonus  in
fiscal 1994.

COMPENSATION FOR THE PRESIDENT (CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER)

   
    The Committee applies the same standards in establishing the compensation of
the Company's Chief Executive Officer as are used for other executives. However,
there  are several procedural differences. The  Chief Executive Officer does not
submit an evaluation  of his  own performance, nor  does he  participate in  the
review  by  the full  Board  on the  amount and  nature  of his  compensation as
determined by the Committee. Peter Cherry received a cash bonus of $50,000 based
on the Company's performance in fiscal year 1994 and his individual contribution
to the Company. The bonus was determined in its discretion by the Committee.  In
arriving at its decision, the Committee considered the Company's earnings before
interest and taxes as a percent of average investment for the year, Mr. Cherry's
work in the development of competitive strategies for the Company's business and
his  personal  leadership.  No specific  weight  was  assigned to  any  of these
elements.
    

    This report  is submitted  by the  Compensation Committee  of the  Board  of
Directors:

                       Robert B. McDermott, Chairman
                       Thomas L. Martin
                       Charles W. Denny

                                       6
<PAGE>
COMPENSATION COMMITTEE INTERLOCKS AND INSIDER PARTICIPATION

    Robert McDermott was formerly a partner in the law firm of McDermott, Will &
Emery which provides legal services to the Company on a regular basis.

    In November of 1993, WLC Investment Co. (owned entirely by Walter L. Cherry,
a  Director  and an  employee  of the  Company)  and VBC  Investment  Co. (owned
entirely by Virginia B. Cherry, the wife of Walter L. Cherry), (collectively the
"Holding Companies"), entered into  an agreement with the  Company by which  the
Company  acquired all shares of the Company's  Common Stock owned by the Holding
Companies (175,000 shares each) in exchange for an identical number of shares of
such stock,  and immediately  thereafter the  Holding Companies  liquidated  and
dissolved.  The exchange  and liquidation/dissolution  of the  Holding Companies
qualified as a  tax-free reorganization to  each of the  parties, and a  private
letter  ruling  to  that effect  has  been  obtained from  the  Internal Revenue
Service. The exchange did not constitute a change of control with respect to the
Company. The exchange did not increase  the number of shares outstanding or  the
capital  accounts of  the Company,  because, upon receipt  of the  shares of the
Company from the Holding Companies, the Company immediately cancelled the shares
and returned them to the status of authorized but unissued shares of the  Common
Stock  of the Company. The  Company did not assume  any liability of the Holding
Companies or incur any expenses in connection with the transaction.

    Walter L. Cherry, a Director of the  Company, is an employee of the  Company
and received $107,000 in fiscal 1994 for his services as an employee.

                                       7
<PAGE>
                               PERFORMANCE GRAPH

   
    The following performance graph compares the yearly percentage change in the
Company's  cumulative  total stockholder  return on  its  Common Stock  with the
cumulative total return  of the  Russell 3000  and the  Russell 3000  Electrical
Equipment Industry indices for the period of five years commencing March 1, 1989
and ending February 28, 1994.
    

                                   [GRAPHIC]

<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                   1989       1990       1991       1992       1993       1994
                                                                 ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------  ---------
<S>                                                              <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>
The Cherry Corporation                                               100.0       48.8       35.9       64.9      189.6      170.0
Russell 3000                                                         100.0      116.4      132.2      157.5      174.4      191.4
Russell 3000 Electrical Equipment Industry                           100.0      128.3      142.8      172.7      196.1      213.1
<FN>
- ---------
(1)   The Company has selected the Russell 3000 Electrical Equipment Industry as
      one  comparison of  total stockholder return.  The Company  is included in
      this industry  index  and  believes  that  it  provides  a  comparison  as
      prescribed  by the  Securities and Exchange  Commission requirements. This
      industry index is  only computed quarterly  on a calendar  year basis  and
      therefore  the indices shown above for this industry are as of March 31 of
      the respective years. Although  the Company's total  return is based  upon
      its  fiscal year  end of the  last day  of February, it  believes that any
      difference that may result is not material.

(2)   The stock price performance  shown on the graph  above is not  necessarily
      indicative of future price performance.
</TABLE>

                                       8
<PAGE>
               PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION

DESCRIPTION OF THE AMENDMENT AND THE DISTRIBUTION

    At  the Annual Meeting the stockholders of  the Company are also being asked
to consider and act upon a proposal (the "Proposal") to approve an amendment  in
the  form  attached as  Exhibit A  (the  "Amendment") to  Article Fourth  of the
Company's Certificate of Incorporation, as  amended, which would (i)  reclassify
the  existing Common Stock of the Company (the "Existing Common Stock") as Class
B Common  Stock,  (ii)  authorize  a  new  class  of  non-voting  common  stock,
designated  as Class  A Common  Stock, (iii)  increase the  number of authorized
shares  of  Common  Stock  from  ten  million  (10,000,000)  to  thirty  million
(30,000,000), consisting of twenty million (20,000,000) shares of Class A Common
Stock  and ten  million (10,000,000)  shares of Class  B Common  Stock, and (iv)
establish the rights, powers and limitations of the Class A Common Stock and the
Class B Common Stock.

    If the  Amendment is  adopted  by the  stockholders,  the Board  intends  to
prepare  and file a Certificate of Amendment to the Certificate of Incorporation
of the Company in accordance with the Amendment. The Amendment will be effective
immediately upon acceptance of filing by the Secretary of State of Delaware (the
"Effective Date"). The Board  would then be free  to issue Common Stock  without
any further action on the part of the stockholders. Although the Board presently
intends  to file the  Certificate of Amendment,  if the Proposal  is approved by
stockholders, the resolution of stockholders will reserve to the Board the right
to defer or abandon the Proposal and not file such Certificate of Amendment even
if the Amendment is approved by the stockholders.

    If the Board elects to file the Certificate of Amendment, promptly after the
Effective Date, the Board presently intends  to authorize a distribution of  one
share  of  Class  A  Common  Stock  for  each  share  of  Existing  Common Stock
outstanding on the record  date (the "Distribution").  The Distribution will  be
essentially a two-for-one stock split. The record date for the Distribution (the
"Distribution  Record Date") and the date of  distribution of the Class A Common
Stock are expected to  be established promptly after  the Amendment is  approved
and adopted by the stockholders. Stockholder approval of the Distribution is not
required  by Delaware law and is not  being solicited by the Proxy Statement and
there is no assurance that the Distribution will actually be effected.

    Upon effectiveness  of the  Amendment, each  outstanding share  of  Existing
Common  Stock will automatically be converted into, and the certificate therefor
will be deemed to  represent, one share  of Class B  Common Stock. The  Existing
Common Stock certificates will no longer specify the correct designation.

    As  soon as  practicable after  the effectiveness  of the  Amendment, Harris
Trust and Savings Bank, the Company's  transfer agent, will mail to each  record
holder  of Existing  Common Stock  on the Distribution  Record Date  a letter of
transmittal (the "Transmittal Letter"). New certificates representing the  Class
A  Stock and the Class B  Stock will be issued to  the record holders of Class B
Stock who deliver  properly executed  Transmittal Letters  accompanied by  their
certificates representing shares of Existing Common Stock.

    Under  the provisions of the Amendment,  the currently outstanding shares of
Existing Common Stock would  be reclassified as Class  B Common Stock and  would
continue  to have  their present rights,  powers and limitations.  As more fully
described below,  the  new  Class  A Common  Stock  will  have  certain  special
characteristics. In particular, the holders of Class A Common Stock as such will
not  be entitled to vote on any matters except as otherwise provided or required
by law. At the time of the Distribution, there will be no change in the relative
voting power or equity of any  stockholder of the Company, including members  of
the  family of  Walter and  Virginia Cherry  (the "Cherry  Family"), because the
Distribution will be  made to all  stockholders in proportion  to the number  of
shares of Existing Common Stock owned on the Distribution Record Date.

    The  Amendment  has  been unanimously  approved  by the  Company's  Board of
Directors. Each of the directors  who is neither a  member of the Cherry  Family
nor an officer or employee of the Company voted to

                                       9
<PAGE>
approve   the  Amendment.  The  Board  believes   that  the  Amendment  and  the
Distribution are in the best interests  of the Company and its stockholders  and
recommends  that you vote "FOR" the adoption  of the Amendment. See "Reasons for
the Proposal; Recommendation of the Board of Directors."

BACKGROUND OF THE PROPOSAL

    In recent  years, a  number  of publicly  held  companies with  majority  or
controlling  ownership  by  their  founding  families  have  adopted  dual class
capitalization structures.  Many  companies  which  adopted  dual  class  voting
structures adopted such plans prior to the adoption in 1988 of Rule 19c-4 of the
Rules  and Regulations under the Securities Exchange  Act of 1934. This Rule has
since been  vacated by  a Federal  Appellate  Court decision  in 1990,  but  was
thereafter  adopted as a rule of the NASD. Certain dual class structures adopted
prior  to  enactment  of  Rule   19c-4  had  provisions  which   disenfranchised
stockholders  by creating  new classes of  stock with greater  voting rights per
share. Other dual  class capitalization structures  (including that proposed  by
the  Company) were  intended to  comply with  Rule 19c-4,  so as  not to  have a
disenfranchising effect  on existing  stockholders. In  reviewing the  Company's
capital  structure and possible  alternatives for the  future, management, after
consultation with the  Company's financial  advisors and  the Company's  outside
legal  advisors,  determined that  a structure  which  complies with  Rule 19c-4
offered the  Company  a  number  of  possible  advantages  that  outweighed  the
potential  disadvantages, and management  determined to present  to the Board of
Directors the Proposal to establish a dual class capital structure.

   
    Members of  the Cherry  Family  together control  approximately 60%  of  the
voting  power  of  the Company.  See  "Stock Ownership  Information."  The Board
believes that  the Cherry  Family's  voting power  has  been beneficial  to  the
Company.  The  Board of  Directors believes  that  the management  and operating
policies of  the  Company  in  recent years,  which  have  been  implemented  in
substantial  part due  to the  influence and  control of  members of  the Cherry
Family, have contributed to the growth and success of the Company, and therefore
believes that the  retention by  members of the  Cherry Family  of their  voting
power  with respect to the  Company is in the best  interests of the Company and
its stockholders. However, since any stock sales by the Company would reduce the
Cherry Family  voting  power,  preservation  of that  voting  power  limits  the
Company's  ability  to sell  stock in  financings.  Furthermore, members  of the
Cherry Family have sought  the ability to  increase liquidity while  maintaining
their influence in the Company.
    

   
    At its regular meeting on October 7, 1993, management made a presentation to
the  Board with respect to possible dual-class capital structures to enhance the
financial  flexibility  of  the  Company  and  its  stockholders.  The   Company
considered  high-low  voting stock  and  convertible stock,  but  rejected these
structures due to applicable NASD rules.  The Board of Directors also gave  some
consideration to the issuance of preferred stock, but decided against it. At its
regular  meeting on May  3, 1994, management  provided the Board  with copies of
preliminary proxy solicitation materials proposed to  be filed with the SEC  and
reviewed the proposal with the Company's financial advisors, Donaldson, Lufkin &
Jenrette  Securities Corporation,  and counsel,  McDermott, Will  & Emery. After
discussion of the  Proposal's likely  benefits and  possible disadvantages,  the
Board authorized adoption of the proposed Amendment and authorized management to
file  the preliminary proxy materials with the SEC, called the annual meeting of
stockholders for June 30, 1994, and established May 16, 1994 as the record  date
for the determination of stockholders entitled to vote at the annual meeting.
    

REASONS FOR THE PROPOSAL; RECOMMENDATION OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS UNANIMOUSLY RECOMMENDS THAT STOCKHOLDERS VOTE "FOR" THE
AMENDMENT.

    The  Board believes  that a capital  structure having two  classes of common
stock offers a number of potential benefits described below and that adoption of
the  Proposal  is  in  the  best  interests  of  the  Company  and  all  of  its
stockholders.  The Proposal enables the Company to issue Class A Common Stock or
securities convertible into Class A Common Stock for financing, acquisition  and
compensation  purposes without adversely affecting  the voting percentage of any
stockholder, including the Cherry Family.

    The Board has given due consideration to the Amendment and the  Distribution
and  has determined  that the  adoption of  the Amendment  would be  in the best
interests of the Company and its stockholders.

                                       10
<PAGE>
   
Some stockholders, on  the other hand,  may believe that  the Amendment and  the
Distribution  are disadvantageous  to the extent  that they  may favor long-term
investors and may discourage  takeovers of the Company.  The Board, two of  whom
are  members of  the Cherry  Family and one  who is  an officer  of the Company,
considered this factor in reaching their recommendation. The Board of  Directors
believes  that the Reclassification  is advantageous to  the Company's long-term
growth strategy to  the extent  that it may  favor long-term  investors and  may
discourage  takeovers of the  Company. The Board  suggests that each stockholder
carefully read and review the description of the Amendment and the  Distribution
and certain effects thereof which are set forth below.
    

FINANCING FLEXIBILITY

    The  Company has followed, and continues to follow, a long-term strategy for
growth. The Board of  Directors believes that this  strategy will best  maximize
the  value of  the Company  and further  believes that  the voting  power of the
Cherry Family has provided the stability and absence of disruption necessary  to
best  pursue this  strategy. Implementation  of the  Proposal would  provide the
Company with  increased flexibility  in the  future to  issue common  equity  in
connection with acquisitions and to raise equity capital or to issue convertible
debt  as a means to  finance future growth without  diluting the voting power of
the Company's existing stockholders,  including the Cherry  Family. The Class  A
Common  Stock may also be used, rather than voting Class B Common Stock, for the
Company's stock  benefit plans.  The Company  has not  heretofore issued  Common
Stock  to finance  its operations or  acquisitions and has  not used substantial
stock options in recent years as a means of retaining or compensating employees.

   
    The Company has selected underwriters and currently anticipates conducting a
public offering of  its Class A  Common Stock,  subject to the  adoption of  the
Amendment  and  completion  of the  Distribution.  Any such  public  offering is
contingent on, among other  things, approval of the  Board of Directors,  market
conditions, and determination as to the appropriate timing of such offering; and
there  can be no assurances  that such offering will  occur. The offering by the
Company is anticipated to be in the range of 2.5 million to 3 million shares  of
Class  A Common Stock. The proceeds from the public offering will be used to pay
off existing bank debt and for general corporate purposes. The offering will  be
made  only  by means  of a  prospectus  complying with  the requirements  of the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and this Proxy Statement does not constitute
an offer to sell, or a  solicitation of an offer to  buy, any shares of Class  A
Common  Stock. If  the public  offering occurs,  existing holders  of the Common
Stock will experience a dilution of  their percentage interests in the  Company.
Although  the Class B  Common Stock may trade  at a premium  with respect to the
Class A Common Stock,  as discussed below, the  Amendment expressly permits  the
Board to issue and sell shares of Class A Common Stock even if the consideration
which  could be  obtained by issuing  or selling  Class B Common  Stock would be
greater.
    

STOCKHOLDER FLEXIBILITY

    Under the Proposal, stockholders desiring to maintain their voting positions
will be able to do so even if they decide to sell or otherwise dispose of up  to
50%  of their equity interest in the  Company. The proposed Amendment thus gives
all stockholders, including the Cherry Family, increased flexibility to  dispose
of a portion of their equity interest in the Company and otherwise determine the
extent  of their equity  ownership without necessarily  affecting their relative
voting power. In the past  three years, members of  the Cherry Family have  made
intra-family  gifts of the Existing Common Stock, have sold approximately 10,000
shares of the  Existing Common  Stock, and  have made  no additional  purchases.
Members  of the Cherry Family have indicated that they intend to continue making
gifts of Cherry  Common Stock to  various charities, family  members and  others
from  time to time. Such gifts, if made, may be more significant than past gifts
and, if made outside the family, are more likely to be shares of Class A  Common
Stock.  However,  members  of  the  Cherry Family  have  informed  the  Board of
Directors that they have no  present plans regarding the  sale of any shares  of
Cherry Common Stock. It is the present intention of members of the Cherry Family
to  hold the shares of Class B Common Stock and to sell shares of Class A Common
Stock if they sell any shares.

    In addition, stockholders  who are  interested in  maintaining their  voting
power  in the Company might be more willing to sell or otherwise dispose of part
of their holdings  if the  sale or other  disposition would  not decrease  their
relative  voting power.  That could  result in  increased trading  of shares and
increased liquidity.

                                       11
<PAGE>
   
Furthermore (subject to the Class  A Protection provision described below),  the
presence  of  two  classes  of  the  Company's  Common  Stock  would  allow  any
stockholder to increase voting power without increasing its equity investment by
selling Class A Common Stock and buying  Class B Common Stock. The Company  does
not presently intend to issue any additional shares of Class B Common Stock.
    

CONTINUITY

   
    The  adoption of the Proposal should reduce  the risk of a disruption in the
continuity of the Company's long-term plans and objectives that could  otherwise
result  if  the  members  of the  Cherry  Family  find it  necessary  to  sell a
significant  block  of  stock  for   diversification,  to  satisfy  estate   tax
obligations  or for  other reasons. Implementation  of the  Proposal would allow
members of the Cherry Family to continue to exercise control over a  substantial
portion of the Company's voting power even if members of the Cherry Family chose
to  reduce their total equity position significantly, and to exercise additional
estate planning  flexibility by  determining the  succession of  voting  control
through  gifts or  bequests of  Class B  Common Stock  to their  heirs. Thus the
Proposal may  provide  a  basis  for  continuity  pursuant  to  such  plans  and
objectives,  if and  when such circumstances  arise, and should  reduce the risk
that the Company could at  some future date be compelled  to consider a sale  of
the  Company in  an environment that  could be  dictated to the  Company and the
Board by the financial circumstances of the  members of the Cherry Family or  by
third parties who may be anticipating or speculating about such circumstances.
    

KEY EMPLOYEES

    Implementation  of the  Proposal should allow  all employees  to continue to
concentrate on other responsibilities without  undue concern that the future  of
the  Company could  be affected  by real  or perceived  succession issues  or an
unwanted  takeover  that  could  otherwise  be  triggered  by  any   substantial
divestiture by the Cherry Family in the future. By reducing the uncertainty that
could  result if members  of the Cherry  Family should dispose  of a significant
block of voting Common Stock, the  Proposal may, therefore, enhance the  ability
of the Company to attract and retain highly qualified key employees.

BUSINESS RELATIONSHIPS

    Implementation  of  the  Proposal  may enhance  the  existing  and potential
business relationships  of  the  Company with  suppliers,  customers  and  other
parties  who may become concerned about changes in control of the Company in the
event the Cherry Family holdings are diluted.

   
CERTAIN POTENTIAL DISADVANTAGES OF THE PROPOSAL
    
   
    While the  Board of  Directors  has determined  that implementation  of  the
Proposal  in the best interests  of the Company and  its stockholders, the Board
recognizes  that  implementation   of  the  Proposal   may  result  in   certain
disadvantages, including the following:
    

   
CHANGE OF CONTROL IMPACT
    
   
    Members  of the  Cherry Family  currently own  a significant  portion of the
Existing Common Stock and  collectively have effective  voting control over  the
Company.  Regardless of whether  the Proposal is  implemented, the Cherry Family
will maintain the ability to  keep or dispose of  such voting control. As  noted
above,  however, implementation of the Proposal will allow members of the Cherry
Family to continue to exercise voting control even if some or all of them choose
to reduce their total  equity position by more  than 50%. Implementation of  the
Proposal is likely to limit the future circumstances in which a sale or transfer
of  equity by the Cherry Family could lead  to a merger proposal or tender offer
that is not acceptable to the Cherry  Family or a proxy contest for the  removal
of  incumbent directors. Consequently, the  Amendment and the Distribution might
reduce the possibility that stockholders of the Company may sell their shares at
a premium over prevailing  market prices and make  it more difficult to  replace
the current Board of Directors and management of the Company.
    

   
    The  Company is not aware of any  current intention of members of the Cherry
Family to dispose of any significant amount of Common Stock of the Company or of
any existing or planned effort on the  part of any party to accumulate  material
amounts  of the Company's Common Stock, or  to acquire control of the Company by
means of a  merger, tender offer,  solicitation in opposition  to management  or
otherwise, or to change the Company's management.
    

                                       12
<PAGE>
   
STATE STATUTES
    
   
    Some state securities statutes contain provisions which, due to the issuance
of  Class A Common Stock,  may restrict an offering  of equity securities by the
Company or  the secondary  trading  of its  equity  securities in  such  states.
However,  due to exemptions or  for other reasons, the  Company does not believe
that such provisions will have a material adverse effect on the amount of equity
securities which the Company will be able  to offer, or on the price  obtainable
for  such equity  securities in  such an offering,  or in  the secondary trading
market for the Company's equity securities.
    

   
ACQUISITION ACCOUNTING
    
   
    The Class A Common Stock may not be used to effect a business combination to
be accounted for using the "pooling of interests" method. For such method to  be
used,  the Company would be required to issue  shares of Class B Common Stock as
the consideration for the combination.
    

   
BROKERAGE COSTS; SECURITY FOR CREDIT
    
   
    As typical in connection with any  stock split, brokerage charges and  stock
transfer  taxes, if any,  may be somewhat  higher with respect  to purchases and
sales of Common Stock after the Distribution, assuming transactions of the  same
dollar amount, because of the increased number of shares involved.
    

   
    The  Company does  not expect  that the  adoption of  the Amendment  and the
Distribution will affect the ability of holders  of the common stock to use  the
Class  A Common Stock or  Class B Common Stock as  security for the extension of
credit by financial institutions, securities brokers or dealers.
    

   
INVESTMENT BY INSTITUTIONS
    
   
    Implementation  of  the  Proposal  may   affect  the  decision  of   certain
institutional  investors that would otherwise consider investing in the Existing
Common Stock. The holding of non-voting common stock may not be permitted by the
investment policies of certain institutional investors.
    

   
INTERESTS OF CERTAIN PERSONS
    
   
    The Cherry Family  has an  interest in  the implementation  of the  Proposal
because,  as noted above, the Proposal may enhance the ability of members of the
Cherry Family to retain voting control of the Company even if they dispose of  a
substantial  portion of their shares of  Existing Common Stock. See "Reasons for
the Proposal; Recommendation of the Board of Directors."
    

DESCRIPTION OF THE CLASS A COMMON STOCK AND THE CLASS B COMMON STOCK

    As indicated above, the Amendment will reclassify the Existing Common  Stock
into  Class B Common  Stock and create a  new Class A  Common Stock. The rights,
powers and limitations of the Class A Common Stock and the Class B Common  Stock
are  set  forth  in  full  in  the  proposed  Article  Fourth  of  the Company's
Certificate of Incorporation. The full text of Article Fourth as proposed to  be
amended  is set  forth as  Exhibit A  to this  Proxy Statement  and incorporated
herein by reference. The following summary  should be read in conjunction  with,
and is qualified in its entirety by reference to, such Exhibit A.

VOTING

    Under  the Company's  Certificate of  Incorporation as  now in  effect, each
share of Existing Common Stock  has one (1) vote per  share on all matters,  and
holders  of Existing Common Stock  are entitled to vote  for the election of all
directors and on all other matters submitted to the stockholders of the Company.
There is no provision in  the Company's Certificate of Incorporation  permitting
cumulative  voting. Subject to the Class A Protection provision described below,
each share of Class B Common Stock  will continue to entitle the holder  thereof
to  one (1) vote per share on all  matters on which stockholders are entitled to
vote, including the  election of directors.  The Class A  Common Stock will  not
entitle  the  holder  thereof to  any  votes,  except as  otherwise  provided or
required by law. The Proposal will not  affect the relative voting power of  the
holders of shares of Existing Common Stock (to be reclassified as Class B Common
Stock).

    After  the  Amendment  and  Distribution, actions  submitted  to  a  vote of
stockholders will generally be voted on only by holders of Class B Common Stock.
Under  the  Amended  Certificate  of  Incorporation  and  the  Delaware  General
Corporation  Law, only the affirmative vote of  the holders of a majority of the

                                       13
<PAGE>
outstanding  shares of Class B Common Stock entitled to vote will be required to
amend the  Certificate of  Incorporation or  to authorize  additional shares  of
Common Stock; and the affirmative vote of the holders of two-thirds of the Class
B  Common Stock will be  required to approve any  merger or consolidation of the
Company with or into any  other corporation or a  sale of substantially all  its
assets  or to  approve the  dissolution of  the Company.  (The two-thirds voting
requirement is not a  substantive change. It already  exists in Article  Eighth.
The Proposal will make the requirements of Article Eighth applicable only to the
Class B Common Stock.) The holders of Class B Common Stock will elect the entire
Board  of  Directors.  In  addition, as  permitted  under  the  Delaware General
Corporation Law, the Amended Certificate of Incorporation will provide that  the
number of authorized shares of the Common Stock of either class may be increased
or  decreased,  but not  below the  number  of shares  then outstanding,  by the
affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of the Class B Common Stock.

    Under the  Delaware General  Corporation Law,  however, holders  of Class  A
Common  Stock will be entitled  to vote on proposals to  change the par value of
the Class  A Common  Stock or  to alter  or change  the powers,  preferences  or
special  rights of  the shares of  Class A  Common Stock, including  the Class A
Protection provision, which may affect them adversely.

DIVIDENDS AND OTHER DISTRIBUTIONS

    Each share of Class A Common Stock and Class B Common Stock will be equal in
respect to  dividends  and  other  distributions  in  cash,  stock  or  property
(including  distributions  in  connection  with  any  recapitalization  and upon
liquidation, dissolution  or winding  up  of the  Company),  except that  (i)  a
dividend  or distribution in cash or property on a share of Class A Common Stock
may be greater than any dividend or distribution in cash or property on a  share
of  Class B Common Stock,  and (ii) dividends or  other distributions payable on
the Common Stock  in shares of  capital stock shall  be made to  all holders  of
Common  Stock and  may be  made (a)  in shares  of Class  A Common  Stock to the
holders of Class B Common Stock and to the holders of Class A Common Stock,  (b)
in  shares of Class B Common Stock to the holders of Class B Common Stock and in
shares of Class A Common Stock to the holders of Class A Common Stock, or (c) in
any other authorized class  or series of  capital stock to  the holders of  both
classes of Common Stock. In no event will either Class A Common Stock or Class B
Common   Stock  be   split,  subdivided   or  combined   unless  the   other  is
proportionately split, subdivided or combined.

    Although the  Board of  Directors  would have  authority under  the  Amended
Certificate  of Incorporation  to pay  dividends and  make distributions  on the
Class A Common Stock in  amounts greater than on the  Class B Common Stock,  the
Board  presently intends that, if  any dividends are paid,  both classes will be
paid on an equal share basis.

MERGERS AND CONSOLIDATIONS

    Each holder of Class A Common Stock will be entitled to receive the same per
share consideration as  the per  share consideration,  if any,  received by  any
holder of the Class B Common Stock in a merger or consolidation of the Company.

CLASS A PROTECTION

    After  implementation  of the  Proposal,  voting rights  disproportionate to
equity ownership could be acquired through acquisitions of Class B Common Stock.
The Company's financial advisors advised the Board that the Class B Common Stock
could therefore trade at  a premium to  the Class A  Common Stock under  certain
circumstances.  In order  to reduce  or eliminate  the economic  reasons for the
Class B Common  Stock and  Class A  Common Stock  to trade  at disparate  market
prices  and  to  give  holders  of  Class  A  Common  Stock  the  opportunity to
participate in any premium paid  in the future for  a significant block (10%  or
more)  of  the  Class  B  Common  Stock  by  a  buyer  who  has  not  acquired a
proportionate share of the  Class A Common Stock,  the Board, upon  consultation
with  the Company's financial and legal  advisors, determined that the Amendment
would include the following two-pronged "Class A Protection" provision.

    First, the Class A  Protection provision seeks to  prevent a person who  has
crossed  a certain  ownership threshold from  gaining control of  the Company by
acquiring shares of Class B Common Stock without buying shares of Class A Common
Stock.  Anyone  who  acquires  more  than  10%  of  the  outstanding  shares  of

                                       14
<PAGE>
Class  B Common Stock after the Effective Date and does not acquire a percentage
of the  outstanding  shares of  Class  A Common  Stock  at least  equal  to  the
percentage  of the shares of  the Class B Common  Stock that the person acquired
above the 10%  threshold will not  be allowed to  vote those shares  of Class  B
Common  Stock acquired  in excess  of the  10% level.  For example,  if a person
acquires 15%  of  the outstanding  shares  of Class  B  Common Stock  after  the
Effective Date but acquires no shares of Class A Common Stock, that person would
be  unable to  vote the 5%  of the  shares of Class  B Common  Stock acquired in
excess of the  10% threshold. The  inability of  the person to  vote the  excess
shares  of Class B Common  Stock will continue under  the Amended Certificate of
Incorporation until such time as a sufficient number of shares of Class A Common
Stock have been  acquired by the  person that  the requirements of  the Class  A
Protection provision have been satisfied.

    The second prong of the Class A Protection provision is an "Equitable Price"
requirement.  It is intended to  prevent a person seeking  to acquire control of
the Company from  paying a discounted  price for  the shares of  Class A  Common
Stock  required to be purchased by the acquiring person under the first prong of
the Class  A  Protection provision.  The  Amended Certificate  of  Incorporation
provides  that an equitable price has been paid for the shares of Class A Common
Stock only when they have been acquired at a price at least equal to the greater
of (i) the highest per share price paid  by the acquiring person, in cash or  in
non-cash  consideration, for any shares of  Class B Common Stock acquired within
the 60-day periods  preceding and  following the  acquisition of  the shares  of
Class A Common Stock or (ii) the highest closing market sale price of a share of
Class  B Common Stock during the 30-day  period preceding the acquisition of the
shares of Class A Common Stock. The value of any non-cash consideration will  be
determined  by the Board of  Directors of the Company  acting in good faith. The
highest closing market sale price of a share of Class B Common Stock will be the
highest closing  sale  price  on  the NASDAQ  National  Market  System  or  such
securities  exchange or other  quotation system then  constituting the principal
trading market  for either  class of  the Common  Stock. In  the event  that  no
quotations are available, the highest closing market sale price will be the fair
market  value during  the 30-day period  of a share  of Class B  Common Stock as
determined by the Board of  Directors of the Company  acting in good faith.  The
Company believes that as a practical matter, a person seeking to acquire control
of  the  Company would  have to  buy the  Class A  and Class  B Common  Stock at
virtually the same time and the same price, as might occur in a tender offer, in
order to ensure that the  acquiring person would be able  to vote the shares  of
Class B Common Stock acquired in excess of the 10% threshold.

    Under  the Class A Protection provision, an acquisition of shares of Class B
Common Stock  would be  deemed to  include  any shares  that a  person  acquires
directly  or indirectly, in one transaction or a series of transactions, or with
respect to which that  person acts or  agrees to act in  concert with any  other
person.  Unless there are  affirmative attributes of  concerted action, however,
"acting or agreeing to act  in concert with any  other person" will not  include
actions  taken  or  agreed to  be  taken  by persons  acting  in  their official
capacities as directors or officers of the Company or actions by persons  merely
because they are related by blood or marriage. Also, an acquisition of shares of
Class  B Common Stock will  not be deemed to  include acquisitions by bequest or
inheritance, by operation of law,  upon the death of  any individual, or by  any
other  transfer without valuable consideration, including a gift that is made in
good faith  and  not  for  purposes of  circumventing  the  Class  A  Protection
provision.

    The  Class  A Protection  provision  will not  apply  to any  increase  in a
holder's percentage ownership of  Class B Common Stock  resulting solely from  a
change  in the total number of shares of Class B Common Stock outstanding as the
result of a repurchase of  shares of Class B Common  Stock by the Company  since
the  last date  on which that  holder acquired  shares of Class  B Common Stock.
Furthermore, the provision  will not  prevent the voting  of shares  of Class  B
Common Stock which could otherwise be voted merely because the owner disposes of
Class A Common Stock. The Class A Protection provision also provides that to the
extent  that the voting  power of any  Class B Common  Stock cannot be exercised
pursuant to the provision, that Class B Common Stock will not be included in the
determination of the  voting power  of the Company  for any  purposes under  the
Amended  Certificate of Incorporation or  under the Delaware General Corporation
Law.

                                       15
<PAGE>
   
LIMITED CONVERTIBILITY
    
    Except as described below, neither the Class A Common Stock nor the Class  B
Common Stock will be convertible into another class of Common Stock or any other
security of the Company.

    The  Class A Common Stock could be converted  into Class B Common Stock on a
share-for-share basis by a resolution of the Board of Directors if, as a  result
of  the existence of the  Class A Common Stock, either  class of Common Stock is
excluded from trading on  NASDAQ (or any national  securities exchange on  which
the Common Stock is then listed).

    In  addition, if  at any time  the number  of outstanding shares  of Class B
Common Stock as reflected on the stock transfer books of the Company falls below
10% of the aggregate number  of outstanding shares of  Class A Common Stock  and
Class  B Common Stock, then, immediately upon  the occurrence of such event, all
the outstanding shares of Class A Common Stock shall be automatically  converted
into shares of Class B Common Stock, on a share-for-share basis. For purposes of
the  immediately preceding sentence, any shares of Class A Common Stock or Class
B  Common  Stock  repurchased  by  the   Company  shall  no  longer  be   deemed
"outstanding" from and after the date of repurchase.

    In  the  event  of  any  such  conversion  of  the  Class  A  Common  Stock,
certificates which formerly  represented outstanding  shares of  Class A  Common
Stock  will thereafter be deemed to represent a like number of shares of Class B
Common  Stock  and  all  shares  of  Common  Stock  authorized  by  the  Amended
Certificate  of Incorporation  will be  deemed to  be shares  of Class  B Common
Stock.

PREEMPTIVE RIGHTS

    The Common Stock will not carry  any preemptive rights enabling a holder  to
subscribe  for or  receive shares of  any class of  stock of the  Company or any
other securities convertible into shares of any class of stock of the Company.

TRANSFERABILITY: TRADING MARKET

    Like the Existing Common  Stock, the Class  A Common Stock  and the Class  B
Common  Stock will  be freely transferable.  The Company  is filing applications
with the NASD with respect  to the Class A Common  Stock and the Class B  Common
Stock and, like the Existing Common Stock, it is expected that both such classes
will  be listed for quotation on the NASDAQ National Market System. See "Certain
Effects of the Proposal -- Potential Changes in Law or Regulations."

INCREASE IN AUTHORIZED COMMON STOCK

    The Company's Certificate of Incorporation, as amended, presently authorizes
10,000,000 shares, of the  Existing Common Stock.  The Amendment would  increase
the  total  authorized  number of  shares  of  Common Stock  from  10,000,000 to
30,000,000, authorizing  the issuance  of up  to 20,000,000  shares of  Class  A
Common  Stock  and  up to  10,000,000  shares  of Class  B  Common  Stock. After
implementation of  the Proposal,  approximately 4.7  million shares  of Class  A
Common  Stock and 4.7 million shares of Class B Common Stock would be issued and
outstanding. Approximately 15.3 million shares of  Class A Common Stock and  5.3
million shares of Class B Common Stock would therefore be available for issuance
from  time to  time for  any proper  corporate purpose,  including stock splits,
stock dividends, acquisitions, stock option  plans, funding of employee  benefit
plans   and  public  and   private  equity  offerings.   No  further  action  or
authorization by the stockholders  would be necessary prior  to the issuance  of
the additional shares of Class A Common Stock or Class B Common Stock authorized
pursuant  to the Amendment  unless applicable laws  or regulations would require
such approval in a given instance.

    The Amendment would not increase the number of shares of voting Common Stock
which could be issued,  but would only  authorize a larger  number of shares  of
Class  A Common Stock. A  larger amount of Class A  Common Stock is necessary in
the event the Company effects any stock splits or stock dividends on the  Common
Stock.  The Board of Directors of the Company also believes that it is desirable
to have the additional authorized shares of Common Stock available for  possible
future  financing  and  acquisition transactions,  and  other  general corporate
purposes. Having such additional authorized shares of Common Stock available for
issuance in the future will give  the Company greater flexibility and may  allow
such shares

                                       16
<PAGE>
to  be issued without the expense and  delay of a special stockholders' meeting.
The Company does not presently have any agreement, understanding, arrangement or
plans that would  result in  the issuance  of any  of the  additional shares  of
Common  Stock to be authorized except as set forth in the Amendment and pursuant
to the  Distribution.  Unissued  shares  of Common  Stock  could  be  issued  in
circumstances  that  would  serve  to preserve  control  of  the  Company's then
existing management.  The Company's  Amended Certificate  of Incorporation  will
permit the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares of the Class B Common
Stock  to amend the Amended Certificate  of Incorporation to increase the number
of authorized shares of Class A Common Stock or Class B Common Stock.

STOCKHOLDER INFORMATION

    The Company will deliver  to the holders  of Class A  Common Stock the  same
proxy  statements,  annual  reports  and other  information  and  reports  as it
delivers to holders of Class B Common Stock.

                        CERTAIN EFFECTS OF THE PROPOSAL

EFFECTS ON RELATIVE OWNERSHIP INTEREST AND VOTING POWER

    Because the  Amendment provides  that each  whole share  of Existing  Common
Stock  will be reclassified and changed into  one share of Class B Common Stock,
and because the Distribution is to be made to all stockholders in proportion  to
the  number of shares of  Class B Common Stock  owned on the Distribution Record
Date by each stockholder,  the relative ownership interest  and voting power  of
each  holder  of  a  whole share  of  Existing  Common Stock  will  be  the same
immediately after  effectiveness of  the Amendment  and Distribution  as it  was
immediately prior thereto. Consequently, assuming that the members of the Cherry
Family  retain the shares of Class B Common stock beneficially owned by them and
that the Company does not issue  additional Class B Common Stock, the  Amendment
will not alter the Cherry Family's present voting position in the Company.

    Stockholders  who  sell  their shares  of  Class  B Common  Stock  after the
Distribution will  lose a  greater amount  of voting  control in  proportion  to
equity  than  they would  have  prior to  the  Distribution. At  the  same time,
stockholders desiring to maintain a long-term investment in the Company will  be
free to continue to hold the Class B Common Stock and retain the benefits of the
voting power attached to such Common Stock.

    As of the date of this Proxy Statement members of the Cherry Family had sole
or  shared voting  or dispositive power  over an aggregate  of approximately 2.8
million shares or approximately 60% of the outstanding Existing Common stock  of
the  Company.  Accordingly,  the  Cherry Family  will  receive  an  aggregate of
approximately 2.8 million shares each of Class A Common Stock and Class B Common
Stock in connection with the Amendment and the Distribution.

    If the Cherry Family,  following the Distribution, were  to sell all of  the
shares  of Class A Common Stock received  in the Distribution, the Cherry Family
would still have approximately 60% of the voting power assuming no other change.
The foregoing is for  illustrative purposes only  and is in  no way intended  to
suggest  that the Cherry Family  has any intention of selling  any or all of its
shares  of  Class  A  Common  Stock  or  Class  B  Common  Stock  following  the
Distribution.  It is the  present intention of  members of the  Cherry Family to
hold the shares  of Class B  Common Stock and  to dispose of  shares of Class  A
Common Stock if they dispose of any shares.

EFFECT ON MARKET PRICE

    The  market price of shares of Class A Common Stock and Class B Common Stock
after the Distribution will depend, as before the adoption of the Amendment,  on
many  factors, including, among  others, the future  performance of the Company,
general market conditions  and conditions  relating to  companies or  industries
similar  to that  of the  Company. Accordingly,  the Company  cannot predict the
prices at which the  Class A Common  Stock and Class B  Common Stock will  trade
following  the  adoption of  the  Amendment and  the  Distribution, just  as the
Company could not  predict the price  at which the  Existing Common Stock  would
trade  absent the Amendment and  the Distribution. On May    , 1994, the closing
price of the  Existing Common Stock  was $        per share  as reported on  the
NASDAQ  National Market System. As  discussed above, under certain circumstances
the  Class  B  Common   Stock  could  trade  at   a  premium  compared  to   the

                                       17
<PAGE>
Class  A Common Stock. However, after  consultation with the Company's financial
and legal  advisors,  the Board  of  Directors  included a  Class  A  Protection
provision  for the  Class A  Common Stock  to reduce  or eliminate  the economic
reasons for the Class B Common Stock to trade at a premium compared to the Class
A Common  Stock. Should  a premium  on the  Class B  Common Stock  develop,  the
Amendment expressly permits the Board to issue and sell shares of Class A Common
Stock  even if the consideration  which could be obtained  by issuing or selling
Class B Common Stock would be greater. The Amendment also expressly permits  the
Board to purchase shares of Class B Common Stock even if the consideration which
would be paid by purchasing Class A Common Stock would be less.

    Because  the market  price of  the Class  B Common  Stock is  expected to be
approximately one-half of  the price of  the Existing Common  Stock, it will  be
possible to acquire more voting Common Stock for a given amount of consideration
after  the Distribution.  Therefore, subject  to the  requirement to  purchase a
proportionate amount  of  Class  A  Common  Stock  under  certain  circumstances
pursuant to the Class A Protection provision discussed above, the Proposal would
permit  stockholders, including  the Cherry  Family, to  increase their relative
voting control at a lower cost. The  Cherry Family has advised the Company  that
it  has no present plans to acquire  any additional shares of Common Stock after
the Distribution.

TRADING MARKET

    Upon effectiveness of  the Amendment,  approximately 4.7  million shares  of
Class  B Common  Stock will be  issued and outstanding.  After the Distribution,
approximately 4.7 million  shares of  Class A Common  Stock will  be issued  and
outstanding.  To minimize dilution of voting power to existing stockholders, the
Company is more likely  to issue additional  Class A Common  Stock than Class  B
Common  Stock  in  the future  to  raise  equity, finance  acquisitions  or fund
employee benefit  plans. Furthermore,  members  of the  Cherry Family  are  more
likely  to dispose of Class A Common Stock  over time than Class B Common Stock.
Any such  issuance  of  additional  Class  A Common  Stock  by  the  Company  or
dispositions  of Class A Common  Stock by members of  the Cherry Family or other
major stockholders may  serve to  further increase  market activity  in Class  A
Common Stock relative to the Class B Common Stock.

EFFECT ON BOOK VALUE AND EARNINGS PER SHARE

    Although the interest of each stockholder in the total equity of the Company
will remain unchanged as a result of the Distribution, the issuance of the Class
A Common Stock pursuant to the Distribution will, like any stock dividend, cause
the  book value and earnings per share of  the Company to be adjusted to reflect
the increased number of shares outstanding.  Although effected in the form of  a
dividend, for accounting purposes, the Distribution will have the same effect as
a two-for-one stock split.

FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSEQUENCES

    The  Company believes that, in general,  for federal income tax purposes (i)
neither the reclassification of Existing Common Stock into Class B Common  Stock
nor the Distribution of Class A Common Stock will be taxable to a stockholder of
the  Company, (ii) neither the Class A Common Stock nor the Class B Common Stock
will constitute "Section 306 stock" within the meaning of Section 306(c) of  the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, (iii) the cost or other basis of each
share  of Existing Common Stock will be apportioned between the share of Class A
Common Stock and the new share of Class B Common Stock in proportion to the fair
market value  of  the  shares  of  each  class of  stock  on  the  date  of  the
Distribution, (iv) the holding period for each new share of Class A Common Stock
and  Class B Common Stock will include such stockholder's holding period for the
old share of  Existing Common Stock  with respect  to which the  Class A  Common
Stock  and Class B Common Stock is distributed,  and (v) no gain or loss will be
recognized on any subsequent conversion of  shares of Class A Common Stock  into
shares  of Class B Common  Stock. Gain or loss  would be recognized, however, on
the subsequent sale  of shares of  Class A Common  Stock and shares  of Class  B
Common Stock. Stockholders are urged to seek the advice of their own tax counsel
on this matter and on state income tax matters.

SECURITIES ACT OF 1933

    Because  the Existing  Common Stock will  be reclassified as  Class B Common
Stock  with  essentially   the  same   rights,  powers   and  limitations,   the
redesignation  is  not  an  "offer,"  "offer  to  sell,"  "offer  for  sale"  or

                                       18
<PAGE>
"sale" of a security within the meaning of Section 2(3) of the Securities Act of
1933, as amended (the "Securities Act") and will not involve the substitution of
one  security  for  another  under   Rule  145  thereunder.  In  addition,   the
Distribution  of the Class A Common Stock as a stock dividend will not involve a
"sale" of a  security under the  Securities Act or  Rule 145. Consequently,  the
Company  is not required to  register and has not  registered the Class A Common
Stock or the Class B Common Stock under the Securities Act.

    Because the Amendment and Distribution do not constitute a "sale" of  either
Class  A  Common  Stock  or  Class B  Common  Stock  under  the  Securities Act,
stockholders will not be  deemed to have purchased  such shares separately  from
the  Existing Common  Stock under  the Securities  Act and  Rule 144 thereunder.
Shares of  Class B  Common  Stock held  immediately  upon effectiveness  of  the
Amendment and shares of Class A Common Stock received in the Distribution, other
than  any such shares held by "affiliates"  of the Company within the meaning of
the Securities Act, may be offered for sale  and sold in the same manner as  the
Existing  Common Stock without registration under the Securities Act. Affiliates
of the Company,  including members  of the Cherry  Family, will  continue to  be
subject to the restrictions specified in Rule 144 under the Securities Act.

NASD CRITERIA

    The  Existing Common Stock is currently traded on the NASDAQ National Market
System and application is being made to  trade the Class A Common Stock and  the
Class  B Common  Stock on  the NASDAQ  National Market  System. The  Proposal is
intended to comply with the requirements  of Rule 19c-4 (the "Rule") adopted  in
July  1988 by  the SEC under  the Securities  Exchange Act of  1934, as amended.
Although a federal appellate court  vacated the Rule as a  rule of the SEC,  the
Rule  has been adopted as  a standard for listing  on the NASDAQ National Market
System by the NASD. The effect of the  Rule is to prohibit the quotation on  the
NASDAQ  National Market System of equity securities  of an issuer if such issuer
"issues any class of security, or takes other corporate action, with the  effect
of  nullifying, restricting or disparately reducing  the per share voting rights
of holders of an outstanding class or classes of common stock of such issuer . .
." The purpose of the  Rule is to prohibit  stock issuances and other  corporate
actions that have a "disenfranchising effect" on existing stockholders.

    The  NASD has advised  the Company that  the issuance of  non-voting Class A
Common Stock pursuant to  the Proposal would not  violate the Rule. The  Company
presently  anticipates that both the Class A Common Stock and the Class B Common
Stock will be traded on the  NASDAQ National Market System. Future issuances  of
Common  Stock may be subject to the Rule and the Company may be required to seek
and obtain NASD approval in connection with such issuances.

EFFECT ON COMPENSATION PLANS

    The only compensation plans  that will be affected  by the Proposal are  the
Company's  Incentive Stock Option Plan and the Company's Employee Stock Purchase
Plan. Outstanding options under the Incentive Stock Option Plan will be adjusted
appropriately to reflect the reclassification  of Existing Common Stock and  the
Distribution.  The  Incentive Stock  Option Plan  expired in  1992 so  no future
options will be granted under such  plan. All purchases made under the  Employee
Stock  Purchase Plan  after calendar  year 1994  will be  for shares  of Class A
Common Stock.

POTENTIAL CHANGES IN LAW OR REGULATIONS

    In recent years, bills  have been introduced in  Congress that, if  enacted,
would  have prohibited the registration of common stock on a national securities
exchange or the trading of such common stock on NASDAQ if such common stock  was
part   of  a  class  of  securities  which  has  no  voting  rights  or  carried
disproportionate voting rights. While  these bills have not  been acted upon  by
Congress,  there can  be no assurance  that such  a bill (or  a modified version
thereof) will not be introduced in Congress in the future. Legislation or  other
regulatory  developments could make the Company's Class A Common Stock and Class
B Common Stock ineligible for trading  on national securities exchanges and  for
trading  on NASDAQ  as a result  of the  Distribution. The Company  is unable to
predict whether any such  regulatory proposals will be  adopted or whether  they
will have such effect. If such legislation is adopted, however, it could include
"grandfather" provisions, in which event the Company might not be affected as to
any action already taken.

                                       19
<PAGE>
   
    If  legislation is  adopted which would  make either class  of the Company's
Common Stock  ineligible  for trading  on  NASDAQ, or  any  national  securities
exchange  on  which it  is listed,  the  Amendment provides  that the  Board may
convert Class A  Common Stock into  Class B Common  Stock on a  share for  share
basis.
    

   
GENERAL
EXPENSES
    

    The  costs of proceeding  with the Proposal (such  as transfer agent's fees,
printing, engraving  and mailing  costs, legal  fees, investment  banking  fees,
solicitation  fees, and NASD fees) will be charged against the Company's pre-tax
earnings. The approximate cost of proceeding  with the Proposal is estimated  to
be $300,000, inclusive of fees of financial and legal advisors.

   
FINANCIAL INFORMATION
    
   
    The  Company believes  that its  stockholders can  exercise prudent judgment
with respect to the  decision whether to vote  to approve the Amendment  without
reference  to the financial statements of the Company. The Company has furnished
its financial  statements  to stockholders  in  its 1994  Annual  Report,  which
accompanies this Proxy Statement. In addition, the Company will promptly provide
without  charge  to any  stockholder,  on the  request  of such  stockholder, an
additional copy of  the 1994 Annual  Report and the  Company's most recent  Form
10-K.  Written requests  for such  copies should  be directed  to the Treasurer,
Secretary  and  Corporate  Controller,  The  Cherry  Corporation,  3200  Avenue,
Waukegan, Illinois 60087, or by telephone to (708) 662-3508.
    

VOTE REQUIRED FOR APPROVAL

    The  affirmative  vote  of the  holders  of  a majority  of  the outstanding
Existing Common Stock is required for approval of the Amendment. Abstentions and
broker non-votes will count as votes against the Proposal. The Company has  been
advised  by members of the Cherry Family,  who in the aggregate beneficially own
or have the power to vote  approximately 60% of the outstanding Existing  Common
Stock  entitled to  vote at the  meeting, that they  intend to vote  in favor of
approval of the  Amendment. As noted  above, the Board  of Directors  recommends
that the shareholders vote "FOR" the Proposal and the adoption of the Amendment.

                             ACCOUNTING INFORMATION

   
    The  Company's Independent  Public Accountants  for fiscal  1994 were Arthur
Andersen & Co., and such firm is expected to have representatives at the  annual
meeting  of  stockholders  who  will  be  available  to  respond  to appropriate
questions at that  time and  have an  opportunity to  make a  statement if  they
desire to do so.
    

                                          By Order of the Board of Directors

                                                       DAN A. KING
                                                        SECRETARY
June 15, 1994

                                       20
<PAGE>
                                   EXHIBIT A
               ARTICLE FOURTH OF THE CERTIFICATE OF INCORPORATION
                           OF THE CHERRY CORPORATION
                     AS PROPOSED TO BE AMENDED AND RESTATED

    FOURTH: The total number of shares of all classes of capital stock which the
corporation  shall have authority to issue is thirty million (30,000,000) shares
of which shall be divided into two classes as follows:

        (a) Twenty Million (20,000,000)  shares of Class A  Common Stock of  the
    par value of one dollar ($1.00) per share; and

        (b)  Ten Million (10,000,000) shares of Class  B Common Stock of the par
    value of one dollar ($1.00) per share.

    Upon a Certificate  of Amendment  of Restated  Certificate of  Incorporation
becoming  effective  pursuant to  the General  Corporation Law  of the  State of
Delaware (the "Effective Time"), and without  any further action on the part  of
the  Corporation or  its stockholders,  each share  of the  Corporation's Common
Stock, $1.00 par value,  then issued (including shares  held in the treasury  of
the  Corporation), shall  be automatically  reclassified, changed  and converted
into one (1) fully paid and non-assessable share of Class B Common Stock,  $1.00
par  value. Any stock certificate that, immediately prior to the Effective Time,
represents shares of  Common Stock, $1.00  par value, will,  from and after  the
Effective  Time, automatically and without the  necessity of presenting the same
for exchange, represent that number of shares of Class B Common Stock equal  the
number  of shares of Common  Stock represented by such  certificate prior to the
Effective  Time.  As  soon  as   practicable  after  the  Effective  Time,   the
Corporation's  transfer agent  shall mail  a transmittal  letter to  each record
holder who would be entitled to receive a share of Class B Common Stock.

    The  Class  A  Common  Stock  and  Class  B  Common  Stock  are  hereinafter
collectively  referred to  as the "Common  Stock." The  designations and powers,
preferences and  rights, and  the  qualifications, limitations  on  restrictions
thereof, of the above classes of stock shall be as follows:

        (a)    RIGHTS.   Except as  otherwise  required by  law or  as otherwise
    provided in this certificate,  each share of Class  A Common Stock and  each
    share  of Class  B Common  Stock shall  have identical  powers, preferences,
    qualifications, limitations and other rights.

        (b)  DIVIDENDS.   Subject to  all of the  rights of any  class of  stock
    authorized  after the  effective date  of this  provision of  Article Fourth
    ranking senior to the  Common Stock as to  dividends, dividends may be  paid
    upon  the Class  A Common  Stock and the  Class B  Common Stock  as and when
    declared by the  Board of Directors  out of funds  and other assets  legally
    available for the payment of dividends. If and when dividends on the Class A
    Common Stock and the Class B Common Stock are declared and payable from time
    to time by the Board of Directors whether payable in cash, in property or in
    shares  of stock of the corporation, the holders of the Class A Common Stock
    and the holders  of the  Class B  Common Stock  shall be  entitled to  share
    equally, on a per share basis, in such dividends, except that (1) a dividend
    or  distribution in cash or property on a  share of Class A Common Stock may
    be greater than any dividend or distribution in cash or property on a  share
    of Class B Common Stock, and (2) dividends or other distributions payable on
    the  Common Stock  in shares  of any authorized  class or  series of capital
    stock of the corporation may be made  (i) in shares of Class A Common  Stock
    to the holders of Class A Common Stock and in shares of Class B Common Stock
    to  the holders of  Class B Common Stock,  (ii) in shares  of Class A Common
    Stock to the holders of Class A Common  Stock and to the holders of Class  B
    Common  Stock, or (iii) in  any other authorized class  or series of capital
    stock to the holders of both classes of Common Stock.

        (c)   LIQUIDATION.   In the  event of  any liquidation,  dissolution  or
    winding  up of the corporation, whether  voluntary or involuntary, and after
    the holders of  any class of  stock authorized after  the effective date  of
    this  provision of Article Fourth  ranking senior to the  Common Stock as to
    assets shall have been paid in full the amounts to which such holders  shall
    be entitled, or an amount sufficient to pay

                                      A-1
<PAGE>
    the aggregate amount to which such holders shall be entitled shall have been
    set  aside for the benefit  of the holders of  such stock, the remaining net
    assets of the corporation  shall be distributed pro  rata to the holders  of
    both classes of the Common Stock.

        (d)     MERGER  AND  CONSOLIDATION.    In  the  event  of  a  merger  or
    consolidation of the corporation with or into another entity (whether or not
    the corporation is  the surviving  entity), the  holders of  Class A  Common
    Stock  shall be entitled to receive the  same per share consideration as the
    per share  consideration, if  any, received  by any  holder of  the Class  B
    Common Stock in such merger or consolidation.

        (e)  VOTING.  (1) Except as otherwise expressly provided with respect to
    any  other class of stock and except as  otherwise may be required by law or
    this certificate, the Class B Common Stock shall have the exclusive right to
    vote for  the election  of directors  and for  all other  purposes and  each
    holder  of Class B Common Stock shall be entitled to one vote for each share
    of Class  B  Common  Stock  held.  Except  as  expressly  provided  in  this
    certificate  and except  as otherwise  required by  law, the  Class A Common
    Stock shall have no voting rights.

        (2) The Class A Common Stock shall  be entitled to vote separately as  a
    class  only with  respect to (i)  proposals to  change the par  value of the
    Class A Common Stock, (ii) other  amendments to this certificate that  alter
    or  change the powers, preferences  or special rights of  the Class A Common
    Stock so as to affect  them adversely, and (iii)  such other matters as  may
    require class voting under the Delaware General Corporation Law.

        (3)  The number of authorized shares of Class A Common Stock and Class B
    Common Stock may  be increased  or decreased (but  not below  the number  of
    shares  then  outstanding)  by the  affirmative  vote  of the  holders  of a
    majority of the Class B Common Stock.

        (f)  STOCK SPLITS.  The corporation may not split, divide or combine the
    shares of  either  class of  Common  Stock unless,  at  the same  time,  the
    corporation  splits, divides or combines, as the  case may be, the shares of
    the other class of Common Stock in the same proportion and manner.

        (g)  CONVERSION.  (1) All outstanding shares of Class A Common Stock may
    be converted into shares of Class B Common Stock on a share-for-share  basis
    by  a resolution of the Board of Directors  if, as a result of the existence
    of the Class  A Common Stock,  either the Class  A Common Stock  or Class  B
    Common  Stock is, or  both are, excluded  from trading on  the NASD National
    Market System,  or, if  such  shares are  listed  on a  national  securities
    exchange,  from  trading on  the principal  national securities  exchange on
    which such securities are traded.

        (2) All outstanding shares of Class A Common Stock shall be  immediately
    converted  into shares of Class B Common Stock on a share-for-share basis if
    at any time  the number of  outstanding shares  of Class B  Common Stock  as
    reflected  on the stock transfer records  of the corporation falls below 10%
    of the aggregate number of outstanding shares of Class A Common Stock and of
    Class B Common Stock.  For purposes of  the immediately preceding  sentence,
    any shares of Common Stock repurchased by the corporation shall no longer be
    deemed "outstanding" from and after the date of repurchase.

        (3)  In the event of any conversion of the Class A Common Stock pursuant
    to subdivision  (g)(1) or  (g)(2), certificates  which formerly  represented
    outstanding  shares of  Class A  Common Stock  will thereafter  be deemed to
    represent a like number of shares of Class B Common Stock and all authorized
    shares of Common Stock shall consist of only Class B Common Stock.

        (4) For purposes of this subsection (g) of this Article Fourth, the term
    "person"  means  a  natural   person,  company,  government,  or   political
    subdivision,  agency or  instrumentality of  a government,  or other entity.
    "Beneficial  ownership"  shall   be  determined  pursuant   to  Rule   13d-3
    promulgated under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the "1934
    Act"),  or any successor regulation. The formation or existence of a "group"
    shall be determined  pursuant to  Rule 13d-5(b) under  the 1934  Act or  any
    successor regulation.

        (h)   (1) A  Person, as defined in  clause (6) of  paragraph (h) of this
    Article Fourth, who after the Effective Time, acquires any shares of Class B
    Common   Stock   may    not   exercise    the   voting    power   of    that

                                      A-2
<PAGE>
    number  of the shares of Class B Common Stock so acquired that are deemed to
    be excess Class B Shares for purposes of this paragraph (h). An  acquisition
    of  shares of Class B Common Stock  hereunder shall be deemed to include any
    shares of  Class  B  Common  Stock  that  a  Person  acquires,  directly  or
    indirectly,  in  one transaction  or in  a series  of transactions,  or with
    respect to which the Person acts or agrees to act in concert with any  other
    Person.  The number of shares of Class B Common Stock deemed hereunder to be
    excess Class B Shares  shall be determined by  application of the  following
    formula:

           (i) the percentage which the number of shares of Class B Common Stock
       acquired  by the Person since the  Effective Time, bears to the aggregate
       number of outstanding shares of Class B Common Stock;

           (ii) minus 10%;

          (iii) minus  the percentage  which the  number of  shares of  Class  A
       Common  Stock acquired  at an  equitable price  by that  Person after the
       Effective Time bears  to the  aggregate number of  outstanding shares  of
       Class A Common Stock;

           (iv)  times the  aggregate number  of outstanding  shares of  Class B
       Common Stock.

    For purpose of  this determination, any  shares of Class  A Common Stock  or
    Class B Common Stock repurchased by the Company since the last date on which
    a Person acquired any shares of Class A Common Stock or Class B Common Stock
    (whether  in treasury or  retired) shall be deemed  still to be outstanding.
    Determination of excess Class B Shares shall  be made as of the date that  a
    Person,  directly or indirectly, alone or  with others, otherwise would seek
    to exercise or  direct the exercise  of voting power  with respect to  those
    Class B Shares.

        (2)  Shares  of Class  A Common  Stock  shall have  been acquired  at an
    equitable price for  purposes of clause  (1) of this  paragraph (h) only  if
    they were acquired at a price at least equal to the higher of:

           (i) the highest per share price (including any brokerage commissions,
       transfer taxes and soliciting dealers' fees) paid by the acquiring Person
       for  any shares of  Class B Common  Stock acquired by  that Person within
       either 60 days before or 60 days after the shares of Class A Common Stock
       were acquired; or

           (ii)  the  highest  closing  sale  price  during  the  30-day  period
       immediately  before the shares of Class A Common Stock were acquired of a
       share of Class B Common Stock  on the NASDAQ National Market System,  or,
       if  the  shares of  Class B  Common Stock  are not  quoted on  the NASDAQ
       National  Market  System,  on   the  principal  United  States   national
       securities  exchange  on which  the shares  of Class  B Common  Stock are
       listed, or, if the shares of Class  B Common Stock are not listed on  any
       United  States  national securities  exchange, or,  if no  quotations are
       available, the fair market value during such 30-day period of a share  of
       Class  B  Common  Stock as  determined  in  good faith  by  the  Board of
       Directors of the Company.

    If any of the  consideration given by  the Person for any  share of Class  B
    Common Stock under subclause (i) of this clause (2) was other than cash, the
    value of such non-cash consideration shall be as determined in good faith by
    the Board of Directors of the Company.

        (3)  An acquisition of a share of Class B Common Stock shall not include
    for the  purposes of  clause (1)  of this  paragraph (h)  an acquisition  by
    bequest  or  inheritance,  by  operation  of  law  upon  the  death  of  any
    individual,  or  by  any  other  transfer  without  valuable  consideration,
    including  a gift  that is  made in good  faith and  not for  the purpose of
    circumventing this paragraph (h).

        (4) Unless there are affirmative attributes of concerted action,  acting
    or  agreeing to act in  concert with any other  Person shall not include for
    purposes of clause (1) of this paragraph  (h) actions taken or agreed to  be
    taken  by  Persons  acting  in their  official  capacities  as  directors or
    officers of the Company or actions by Persons related by blood or marriage.

                                      A-3
<PAGE>
        (5) To the extent that the voting  power of any share of Class B  Common
    Stock  cannot be  exercised pursuant  to this  paragraph (h),  that share of
    Class B  Common Stock  shall not  be included  in the  determination of  the
    voting  power  of the  Company  for any  purpose  under this  Certificate of
    Incorporation or the Delaware General Corporation Law.

        (6) For purposes of this subsection (h) of this Article Fourth, the term
    "Person" means  a  natural person,  company,  government, or  any  political
    subdivision, agency or instrumentality of a government, or other entity.

        (i)  NO PRE-EMPTIVE RIGHTS.  No stockholder of this corporation shall by
    reason  of  his  holding  shares  of  any  class  have  any  pre-emptive  or
    preferential right to purchase  or subscribe to any  shares of any class  of
    this  corporation,  now  or  hereafter  to  be  authorized,  or  any  notes,
    debentures, bonds, or other securities convertible into or carrying  options
    or  warrants  to  purchase shares  of  any  class, now  or  hereafter  to be
    authorized, whether or not the issuance  of any such shares, or such  notes,
    debentures,  bonds or other securities,  would adversely affect the dividend
    or voting rights of such stockholder, other than such rights, if any, as the
    Board of Directors, in  its discretion from  time to time  may grant and  at
    such  price as  the Board of  Directors in  its discretion may  fix; and the
    Board of Directors may issue shares of any class of this corporation, or any
    notes, debentures, bonds, or other  securities convertible into or  carrying
    options  or warrants to  purchase shares of any  class, without offering any
    such shares  of any  class, either  in whole  or in  part, to  the  existing
    stockholders of any class.

        (j)    ISSUANCES AND  REPURCHASES OF  COMMON  STOCK.   (1) The  Board of
    Directors shall have  the power to  issue and sell  all or any  part of  any
    class  of  stock  herein or  hereafter  authorized to  such  persons, firms,
    associations or corporations,  and for  such consideration as  the Board  of
    Directors  shall from time to time, in its discretion, determine, whether or
    not greater consideration could  be received upon the  issue or sale of  the
    same number of shares of another class, and as otherwise permitted by law.

        (2) The Board of Directors shall have the power to purchase any class of
    stock  herein or hereafter authorized from such persons, firms, associations
    or corporations, and for such consideration as the Board of Directors  shall
    from  time  to  time, in  its  discretion,  determine, whether  or  not less
    consideration could be paid upon the  purchase of the same number of  shares
    of another class, and as otherwise permitted by law.

                                      A-4
<PAGE>
Preliminary Copy
                             THE CHERRY CORPORATION                        PROXY
                  3600 SUNSET AVENUE, WAUKEGAN, ILLINOIS 60087

          THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

THE  UNDERSIGNED  HEREBY REVOKES  ANY  PROXY HERETOFORE  GIVEN  AND ACKNOWLEDGES
RECEIPT OF THE NOTICE AND PROXY STATEMENT FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING.

                                             (IF THE STOCK IS REGISTERED IN  THE
                                             NAME  OF MORE THAN  ONE PERSON, THE
                                             PROXY SHOULD BE SIGNED BY ALL NAMED
                                             HOLDERS. IF  SIGNING  AS  ATTORNEY,
                                             EXECUTOR,  ADMINISTRATOR,  TRUSTEE,
                                             GUARDIAN, CORPORATE OFFICIAL, ETC.,
                                             PLEASE GIVE FULL TITLE AS SUCH.)
                                             ________________________(SIGNATURE)
                                              DATED:______________________, 1994
                                              _______________________(Signature)
<PAGE>
    The undersigned hereby appoints  Walter L. Cherry and  Peter B. Cherry,  and
each of them, as proxies, each with full power of substitution, to represent and
to  vote, as  designated below,  all of  the undersigned's  Common Stock  in The
Cherry  Corporation  at  the  annual  meeting  of  stockholders  of  The  Cherry
Corporation  to  be held  on Thursday,  June  30, 1994,  and at  any adjournment
thereof, with the same authority as if the undersigned were personally present.

<TABLE>
<S>                                     <C>                                     <C>
1. Election of Directors                / / FOR all nominees listed below       / / WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote for all
                                        (except as marked to the contrary)          nominees listed below
</TABLE>

  WALTER L. CHERRY, PETER B. CHERRY, ALFRED S. BUDNICK, THOMAS L. MARTIN, JR.,
           ROBERT B. MCDERMOTT, PETER A. GUGLIELMI, CHARLES W. DENNY

(INSTRUCTION: To withhold authority to vote for any individual nominee, write
that nominee's name on the space provided below.)

<TABLE>
<C>        <S>                                                                              <C>
       2.  Approval of proposal to amend Article Fourth of the Certificate of
           Incorporation, as amended, in the form attached as Exhibit A to the Proxy
           Statement -- recommended by the board of directors                               / / FOR  / / AGAINST  / / ABSTAIN
3. In their discretion, the Proxies are authorized to vote upon such other business as may properly come before the meeting.
</TABLE>

THIS PROXY WHEN PROPERLY EXECUTED  WILL BE VOTED IN  THE MANNER DIRECTED BY  THE
UNDERSIGNED  STOCKHOLDER. IF NO DIRECTION IS MADE,  THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED FOR
PROPOSAL 1 AND PROPOSAL 2.

                    (PLEASE DATE AND SIGN ON REVERSE SIDE.)


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